Fort Collins' Greatest Tables
Best for First Date in Fort Collins
Best for Business Dinner in Fort Collins
The Fort Collins Top 10 — Editorial Rankings
RARE Italian
Fort Collins' finest address for a serious dinner. RARE has built its reputation on two things it controls completely: pasta made from scratch and beef dry-aged in-house. The inspiration is central Italy — Umbria and Tuscany specifically — but the execution is distinctly Northern Colorado, with local sourcing as a genuine commitment rather than a marketing line. The wine list covers Old and New World with real authority. Book the corner table if you can.
Bistro Nautile
The most quietly exceptional restaurant in Fort Collins. Chef Ryan Damasky and his partners have built a French-influenced bistro that takes sustainability as seriously as flavor — Colorado Certified Angus Beef, Colorado poultry, local eggs, and the freshest possible seafood sourced directly from small vendors. The Friday bouillabaisse has achieved near-legendary status among regulars. The happy hour wine program is among the best value propositions in the city.
The Still Whiskey Steaks
A genuinely original steakhouse concept: beef sourced from Gold Canyon Ranch, lightly marinated in a proprietary whiskey formula developed with Fort Collins' Elevation 5003 Distillery, then finished to order. The result is steak with a personality — not overridden by marinade, but distinctly itself. The log-cabin interior creates an atmosphere that is rustic and refined in equal measure. The whiskey flight pairings are not a gimmick — they are worth taking seriously.
Ginger and Baker
The most ambitious dining project Fort Collins has ever produced. A 100-year-old flour mill on Linden Street now houses multiple venues: The Cache, a Colorado steakhouse focused on steaks, chops, and whiskey; The Cafe, serving seasonal farm-to-fork American cooking; and The Market and Bakery, offering fresh pastries and local provisions. The setting is extraordinary. A dining campus with architectural bones this good doesn't happen twice.
Cafe Vino
The wine program alone — 150 bottles in a walk-in cellar, 20 beers on draft, aged single malts — would justify a visit. But Cafe Vino's kitchen deserves equal credit. The beef tartare is prepared with precision. The braised Colorado beef short ribs in blackberry barbecue sauce convert skeptics. The thin-crust pizzas are far better than anyone expects at a wine bar. The room rewards those who slow down, which is rather the point.
The Regional
Family-owned and operated from scratch — every component sourced, every sauce made in-house. The oysters arrive on the half shell as fresh as anything you'll find in a landlocked state. The lamb meatballs have a following. The Thursday chef's special — appetizer, entree, and dessert for $35 — is the best-value full evening in Fort Collins. Noise can be high, but that's the sound of a room full of people having a genuinely good time.
The Farmhouse at Jessup Farm
The Jessup Farm Artisan Village east of Old Town is a destination unto itself — a 19th-century working farmstead converted into a culinary and artisan campus. The Farmhouse anchors it, serving Tuscan and Umbrian-inspired cooking with a genuine commitment to local provenance. The garden courtyard in summer is one of the most romantic dining settings in all of Northern Colorado. Proposals happen here with regularity, and none of them are a surprise.
Ace Gillett's
Fort Collins' most atmospheric room by a comfortable margin. A rooftop terrace above Old Town, live jazz several nights a week, craft cocktails engineered for the long evening rather than the quick drink. The food is solid American — not the main event — but the setting makes everything taste better. Come for sunset on the terrace, stay until the jazz set ends.
Jax Fish House
Part of a Colorado mini-group that has built a reputation for sourcing carefully and cooking simply. The Fort Collins location delivers the same live-fire seafood and daily oyster program that the brand is known for. The oyster bar counter is where solo diners come to eat well without ceremony. The staff can explain where every fish came from, which at this price point should be a requirement.
Little
The most food-forward restaurant in Fort Collins that most visitors haven't found yet. Small, counter-oriented, and intensely seasonal — the menu changes with what's available, not with what's convenient. Dishes arrive in waves designed for sharing and discussion. The kind of intimate dining experience that makes you feel like a local the first time you visit.
The Fort Collins Dining Guide
The Dining Culture
Fort Collins occupies a unique position in the American dining landscape. Home to Colorado State University, it is simultaneously a college town and a genuine food city — and the two identities have shaped each other in ways that produce something distinctive. The craft beer culture is world-famous, but it has also created a dining population that thinks carefully about provenance, fermentation, and craft. Restaurants here are expected to know where their ingredients come from.
Old Town is the heart of everything worth eating. The pedestrian district and surrounding blocks on College Avenue, Oak Street, Mason Street, and Linden Street concentrate Fort Collins' best tables within easy walking distance. This is not a city where you need a car to eat well — you need comfortable shoes and a willingness to linger.
The price ceiling here is genuinely lower than Denver or Boulder. RARE Italian at $100 per person represents a true splurge in Fort Collins terms. Most of the city's finest dining happens in the $40-70 range per person with drinks, which makes Fort Collins a remarkable value proposition for anyone accustomed to major-city dining prices.
Best Neighborhoods
Old Town Fort Collins is the primary dining destination. The district around Old Town Square concentrates the highest density of quality: RARE Italian, Bistro Nautile, The Still Whiskey Steaks, The Regional, and Coopersmith's Pub all sit within a comfortable stroll. The district rewards an evening of walking between tables rather than committing to a single venue.
Midtown along South College Avenue is where Cafe Vino and several neighborhood-driven favorites operate with less tourist pressure and more local character. The Jessup Farm Artisan Village northeast of downtown is a destination for The Farmhouse — a 19th-century farmstead that requires a short drive but rewards it handsomely.
Reservations
Fort Collins operates at a slightly more relaxed pace than Denver or Boulder, but the best rooms still require planning. RARE Italian and Bistro Nautile book one to two weeks ahead for prime weekend slots. The Still Whiskey Steaks recommends reservations daily. Ginger and Baker's Cache steakhouse fills during CSU events — graduation in May and homecoming in October are particularly competitive.
Walk-in dining is viable at most Old Town spots on weeknights. Counter seating at Cafe Vino and Jax Fish House is your best same-evening option. Ace Gillett's rooftop terrace operates first-come on most nights unless a private event has been booked.
Dress Code & Etiquette
Fort Collins is Colorado casual at heart. Even at RARE Italian — the city's most formal dining room — you will encounter fellow diners in tasteful outdoor wear alongside guests in blazers. The unspoken standard is "put in reasonable effort." No restaurant will turn you away for being underdressed, but the better rooms appreciate when guests take the occasion seriously.
The craft beer culture means that non-drinking guests occasionally feel like the minority, but all serious dining rooms in Fort Collins have invested properly in their cocktail and wine programs. You are never without excellent options.
Tipping & Practical Notes
Standard American gratuity applies: 18-22% for table service, 15-18% for counter service. The restaurant industry here runs on the same economics as everywhere in the United States, and the servers at Fort Collins' best rooms have earned their place through genuine craft and knowledge.
Parking in Old Town is available in several public garages within walking distance of all major restaurants. The city is exceptionally bikeable, and many locals cycle to dinner even in shoulder seasons. Uber and Lyft operate effectively throughout the area for those who prefer not to drive at all.